No new posts lately because my computer recently came down with a spontaneous and catastrophic case of fail. I managed to salvage most of my files, but I am still trying to get settled into the new computer and replace various important missing programs, like Word and Photoshop and all programs. Luckily, I am a graduate student, so I have tons of free time and spare cash to dedicate to this task. (Only one of three statements in that last sentence was true.)

For this month’s Taxonomy Fail, and in honor of Halloween, we have a pretty awesome BBC clip on velvet worms. I’ve seen this Life in the Undergrowth video about a million times* because we show it to the 201 students and I highly recommend it. First enjoy the video, then see if you can spot the fail:

(You may need to click over to Youtube to get the video to load properly.)

…Did you catch it? “This cricket has huge eyes, but it’s difficult to see what’s going on around it.”

Here’s a colorful beetle I run across fairly often (they are extremely popular in student collections). While many members of the genus Calosoma, the caterpillar hunters, are black in color, a handful of species (in the creatively named subgenus Calosoma) have metallic green elytra. Calosoma scrutator, the fiery searchers, are further distinguished by a red/gold band around the edge of the wing cases. These beetles are fast and aggressive, preying primarily on caterpillars as both adults and larvae. We recently had a few live beetles donated for an insect zoo we did for a local elementary school, and I got to spend a good deal more time observing them than I ever have in the field.

Caterpillar hunter attacking a cricket.

Not having any caterpillars around, I’ve been feeding them crickets, which they do well on so long as everybody in the tank gets their own cricket meal. There’s a good deal of scrambling and tussling as each beetle attempts to secure a cricket and retreat to a quiet spot to eat, easily devolving into slapstick if two possessive beetles happen to bump into each other. I’ve started passing out crickets with tweezers to minimize the chaos. Luckily, they all appear to be too armored to take any real damage from each other, and they haven’t shown any inclination to eat each other–though at least one forum thread I found says they may. When not eating or searching about the tank they spend most of their time burrowing or tucked under bits of wood and debris.

Nom nom.

Caterpillar hunters possess a ferocious pair of mandibles, but don’t appear to be particularly adept at manipulating their struggling prey–unlike spiders with their pedipalps or mantises with their raptorial forelegs. Instead they scissor away at the soft fleshy parts of their prey, slowly masticating it into a pulp. I have some rather alarmingly gory video that I’ll try to get up at some point.

Apparently the adults have been known to live for an impressive three years, so I’ll have to see if I can keep these flashy fellows around.

Here’s a dramatic local: the red-headed centipede, sometimes called the giant centipede. These guys are the largest bodied centipede in North America, so they’re good for pretty good startle when you suddenly encounter one beneath a log. Centipedes belong to the class Chilopoda, meaning “lip foot.” They get this name from the first pair of legs, which are modified into jaw-like “venom claws,” or maxillipeds. You can see the thick venom claws curving forward from the first red segment directly behind the head.

A red-headed centipede devours a cricket.

Centipedes, unlike herbivorous millipedes, are active predators designed for rapid movement through leaf litter and under logs. They have only one pair of legs per segment (as opposed to the millipedes’ two) and tend to have dorsoventrally flattened bodies. I don’t appear to have the small skittery creature freak out gene, but I always forget how creepy I find these guys. Their particular brand of fast sinuous movement hits me on an instinctive level. It’s definitely fun to watch them eat.

In this species the long hind pair of legs is modified for grasping. I also noticed that the centipede seemed to use it as a kind of defensive false head, rearing up the hind quarters when disturbed and raising the legs like antennae. With the red tone of the final segment it’s a fairly convincing mimic.

Tree crickets are a fun, bizarre looking species of cricket in the subfamily Oecanthinae. With their green color, delicate bodies, and strange flat wings on the males they don’t easily fall into the average person’s image of a cricket. As their name suggests, these crickets live in trees and shrubs, where they take in an ominivorous diet of plant matter and small insects. Because of this somewhat cryptic life history they are seen less commonly than they occur. The best way to find tree crickets is beating trees and shrubs especially at night. They may also be tracked by their calls, or come to lights. The male and female pictured here turned up while sweeping brush at the Texas AgriLife field station.

The most interesting fact I learned about tree crickets: When the male sings, his wing rise up, exposing a special dorsal gland that secrete a tasty snack for the female. While she’s on top chowing down on this nuptial gift, the male takes the opportunity to mate, singing all the while. The spermatophore that is passed from male to female remains partially extruded, so the snacking and singing serves an additional purpose. The male must keep the female distracted so that she does not consume the spermatophore before the sperm has been transferred.

8legs2many today! I found this little guy hunting near a lightsheet at the Welder Wildlife Refuge. As a general rule of thumb smaller pincers mean a more powerful sting, so I took care handling this little guy. Above, you can see him chowing down on a feeder cricket I gave him.

Like spiders, scorpions are arachnids, with eight pairs of walking legs. Their large front claws are not true legs, but actually modified pedipalps, appendages on the prosoma used by chelicerate arthropods for handling food. While snapping pictures and shooting video clips of this guy I also got a chance to get a close up look at another cool appendage– the chelicerae. These are two sharp pincer-like mouthparts used to grab the food and tear off small pieces. These are pulled into the preoral cavity, where food is digested externally prior to being sucked down in liquid form. Chelicerae are unique to a subgroup of arthropods called the Chelicerata–which includes arachnids, horseshoe crabs, and a weird little group called the sea spiders. In spiders the chelicerae bear the fangs (these were the metallic green mouthparts we saw on the bold jumping spider a few posts ago).

Scorpions actually make pretty interesting pets, needing only a warm dark environment with some kind of refuge. Scorpions (and other arachnids) lack the cuticular layer of wax which protects insects from dessication. * It is important to maintain high humidity to prevent them from drying out, particularly for tropical species. They are nocturnal, and so most active at night, which is the best time to feed them. Because they are adapted to living in darkness, they are sensitive to UV light, which can harm them with prolonged exposure. They also fluoresce vividly under a blacklight, which can be a fun way to hunt for them at night, although, again, longterm exposure should be avoided.